ACADEMIC Research
ACADEMIC Research
ACADEMIC Research
Under authors' names, instead of address put the Class name, number, date, and instructor
Abstract should be no more than 150 words. The abstract is a short summary of the paper.
If you had to re-state what your paper says in 150 words or less, what would you say?For
a conference paper, most people will read the abstract to see if they find it interesting
enough to read the whole paper. This makes a lot of sense if you go to a conference in a
topic that interests you, but find that there are 100+ other papers.
By the way, I recommend writing the abstract LAST, since it is easier this way.
Introduction
o Why your topic is important (convince us!)
o Where is it used? Applications
o What you will talk about/do
o Overview of the rest of your paper (section 2 covers...section 3 presents...)
Background
o Any relevant and specific info
e.g. hardware statistics, equipment used
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You are expected to discuss the books and papers that you include in your
references. You must also cite them. If nothing else, include a brief rationale
explaining why you thought it was useful.
What other people did on this topic (or related topics)
Problems and shortcomings of their work
How your work is different and better
Project
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Summary
o Try to draw together the intro, background, and project sections.
How do they all relate together? (They may appear to be disjoint sections to an
unfamiliar reader).
o Restate important results
Conclusions
o What was accomplished / learned
o What you would have done differently
o Future work
References
o You should include a number of books and papers that were useful. If no number
if specified, then include at least 5 books or papers. (If this is a group project,
include at least 5 per person.) Webpages do not count toward this minimum
number. Wikipedia is not appropriate, and you will be penalized if you include it.
o Cite the papers/books that you used
o Anything you found useful
o Include textbooks from class if you want
Introduction
Methods
Results
Discussion
The name of the company and department where you have done your summer
training, the main focus area of the company, and your motivation for choosing
this company as the place for your summer training.
Brief summary of the work you have done, the motivation behind it, and the
significance of the work that you have done in the overall project.
Information about the main project, if the work you have done is part of such
a project.
The significance of the work you have done.
The motivation behind the particular work that you have done and why it is
required.
Detailed description of the work done, including for example:
The algorithms/pseudo-code developed.
Hardware/software environment used.
Software tools used.
Design methods used and learned.
Testing methods and tools used and learned.
Project management methods and processes followed or observed.
Any engineering standards that are followed or observed.
Design, development, documentation and testing participated in or
observed.
Any training received, including seminars attended.
Any configuration and/or maintenance tasks performed.
Detailed description of your own contribution and clearly identification of
the distinctions from others work.
A section in which you explain in detail what knowledge and skills learned
in school you were able to apply to real-world problems during your summer
training, and specifically where and how the knowledge or skills were
useful.
A section in which you explain in detail engineering problems related to
computer systems and applications that you solved.
A section in which you explain in detail the teamwork you were involved in
during the summer training, including (for each team you participated in) the
team role or function of each team member, the training in their background
and current work area, and some information about the team dynamics as
you worked together. You should clearly explain how you related to the
others on the team. If you were not involved in a formal team, the definition
of the term could be interpreted loosely to mean working together with
others on a shared task.
A section in which you explain in detail which professional issues and workrelated ethical issues you saw or became aware of during your summer
training, and how the issue was handled or managed at your company or
institution.
A section in which you explain specifically what you learned or understood
about the economic, environmental, societal and global impact of the
engineering solutions in the projects developed at your company or
institution. You should also write in general about the contemporary issues
that are related with computer engineering, as you understand them from,
and related to, your summer training.
A section in which you explain the self-learning that you did during your
summer training. You should mention any sources that you located and how
you found them (this would include Web sites, books, journals, experts, etc),
and what part of your summer training task you needed them for. Also,
mention any that you made regular use of, and any that you are continuing to
use.
A section in which you explain in detail any new tools or technologies that
you encountered and used during your summer training, how you learned to
use them, and what level of proficiency you came to by the end of your
summer training.
When writing this section, do not forget that the reader may not be familiar
with the topic of the work that you have done. Therefore, explaining too
much is better than not enough.
4. Conclusion (Sonu): Have a conclusion section where you summarize the work
you have done. Clearly re-state your contribution, what you have learned,
experienced and acquired. Be specific in relating these to what you have learned at
Gediz University.